Towing Calculator. Estimate Your MPG and Fuel Cost While Towing.

This towing calculator helps you estimate your real fuel economy and fuel cost the moment you hitch up a trailer, camper, or boat. Your truck’s sticker MPG drops noticeably under load, and guessing at the new number means either overbudgeting on fuel or running shorter on range than you planned for.

You know your empty MPG, but towing changes everything, weight, aerodynamics, and engine load all work against you the moment you hook up. We built this calculator so you get a realistic towing MPG estimate in seconds. Enter your base MPG, your trailer weight, and your terrain,and the calculator adjusts for both weight and terrain to give you a usable number for trip planning.

Written by the FuelConsumptionCalc Research Team

TOWING CALCULATOR

Estimate your MPG and fuel cost while towing a trailer, RV or boat

Towing MPG = Base MPG × (1 − Weight Penalty − Terrain Penalty)
Your vehicle’s normal, unloaded MPG
MPG
Total loaded weight, including cargo
lbs
One-way or round trip total
mi
Per gallon
$/gal
For fuel stop estimate at 65% of range
gal
Towing MPG
MPG

Your Towing Estimate

Your Results
Want your empty MPG from a real fill-up? Use our MPG Calculator  |  Planning the full route? Try our Trip Fuel Calculator  |  Towing for commercial work? See our Truck Fuel Calculator

Use this Towing MPG Calculator to estimate fuel economy while towing a trailer, camper, RV, boat or utility trailer. Calculate towing fuel cost, gallons needed and recommended fuel stops instantly.

Quick Answer

How This Towing Calculator Works

This calculator takes your vehicle’s normal, unloaded MPG and adjusts it for the weight you are towing and the terrain you will be driving through. Enter your base MPG, your trailer’s total weight including cargo, and select flat, hilly, or mountainous terrain for your route.

The calculator applies a weight-based fuel economy penalty and a separate terrain adjustment on top of that, then shows your estimated towing MPG alongside your total fuel cost and gallons needed for the trip distance you enter. This gives you a more realistic number than using your empty MPG for trip planning, which can lead to underestimating fuel cost by a significant margin.

Formula Used

The calculation applies a weight penalty and terrain penalty to your base MPG: Towing MPG = Base MPG x (1 – Weight Penalty – Terrain Penalty)

A common rule of thumb suggests a 2 percent MPG reduction for every 100 lbs of trailer weight. This relationship becomes unrealistic at heavier trailer weights, since a simple linear formula would predict a mathematically impossible penalty well before reaching 5,000 lbs. Because of this, the calculator uses a calibrated, non-linear curve based on published real-world towing MPG comparisons rather than the simple linear rule of thumb, so results stay realistic across the full range of trailer weights. Terrain Penalty adds 0 percent for flat terrain, 10 percent for hilly terrain, and 20 percent for mountainous terrain on top of the weight-based reduction.

Example Calculation

Base MPG: 20 MPG (empty) Trailer Weight: 5,000 lbs Terrain: Flat

Step 1, Weight Penalty:The calculator’s calibrated curve estimates approximately 33 percent MPG reduction for a 5,000 lb trailer, consistent with published real-world towing data for this weight class. A simple linear “2 percent per 100 lbs” rule of thumb would suggest 100 percent at this weight, which is not physically meaningful, so the calculator uses the calibrated curve instead.

Step 2, Adjusted Towing MPG: 20 MPG x (1 – 0.33) = 13.3 MPG

Step 3, Fuel Cost for a 300 Mile Trip at $3.50 per gallon:300 / 13.3 = 22.6 gallons, 22.6 x $3.50 = $78.95 This is the type of calculation the tool above runs the moment you click Calculate, using your own trip numbers instead of this example.

How to Use This Towing Calculator

Enter Your Base MPG

Use your vehicle’s normal, unloaded MPG, not the manufacturer’s towing estimate if one is listed, since this calculator applies its own weight-based adjustment. Use our MPG calculator to find your real-world empty MPG from a recent fill-up if you do not already know it.

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Enter Your Trailer Weight

Select Your Terrain

Choose flat, hilly, or mountainous based on the majority of your route.Mixed-terrain trips should generally lean toward the higher terrain category for a safer fuel budget estimate, since running low on a mountain grade is a bigger problem than having extra fuel on a flat stretch.

Add Your Trip Distance and Fuel Price

Enter your trip distance and current fuel price to get your total fuel cost and gallons needed. For a single trip without the towing adjustment, our fuel cost calculator gives you a standard calculation instead.

Towing MPG Formula Explained

Towing MPG starts from your base MPG and applies two reductions, a weight-based penalty from the trailer itself and a terrain-based penalty from the route. Both penalties combine to produce your final estimated towing MPG.

The Weight Penalty Formula

Commonly cited towing research estimates roughly a 2 percent MPG reduction for every 100 lbs of trailer weight at lower weights, though this relationship is not perfectly linear at higher weights, since aerodynamic drag and engine load do not scale in a simple straight line as weight increases. This calculator uses a calibrated curve based on published real-world towing MPG comparisons rather than a strict linear formula, to avoid producing unrealistic results at heavier trailer weights.

The Terrain Adjustment

Flat terrain applies no additional penalty beyond the weight adjustment.Hilly terrain adds approximately 10 percent additional fuel use, since sustained grades force the engine to work harder pulling the load uphill. Mountainous terrain adds approximately 20 percent additional fuel use for the same reason, intensified by steeper and longer grades.

Worked Example for a 5,000 lb Trailer

A truck with a 20 MPG empty rating tows a 5,000 lb travel trailer on flat terrain. The calculator’s calibrated curve estimates roughly 33 percent MPG reduction for this weight class, bringing the towing MPG to approximately 13 MPG. On hilly terrain, the same setup drops further to around 11 MPG, and on mountainous terrain, to around 9 MPG.

How Much Does Towing Reduce MPG by Trailer Weight

MPG reduction scales with trailer weight. Light trailers under 2,000 lbs typically reduce MPG by 10 to 20 percent, mid-size trailers in the 2,000 to 5,000 lb range reduce MPG by 20 to 35 percent, and heavy trailers over 5,000 lbs can reduce MPG by 35 to 60 percent depending on weight and terrain.

Light Trailers Under 2,000 lbs

Small utility trailers, light boats, and pop-up campers in this weight class typically cause a 10 to 20 percent MPG drop. A 20 MPG vehicle might see 16 to 18 MPG towing a trailer in this range on flat terrain.

Mid-Size Trailers 2,000 to 5,000 lbs

Travel trailers, mid-size campers, and larger boats commonly fall in this range, causing a 20 to 35 percent MPG reduction. A 20 MPG vehicle often sees 13 to 16 MPG towing a trailer in this class on flat terrain.

Heavy Trailers Over 5,000 lbs

Fifth wheels, large travel trailers, and heavy equipment trailers in this range can reduce MPG by 35 to 60 percent. A 20 MPG vehicle towing an 8,000 lb fifth wheel might see only 9 to 12 MPG, and noticeably less on hilly or mountainous terrain.

Planning Fuel Stops While Towing

Plan fuel stops at 60 to 70 percent of your towing range rather than your vehicle’s full empty range, since towing range estimates carry more uncertainty than normal driving due to terrain, headwind, and load variation along a route. A tank that theoretically gives 340 miles of towing range is safer treated as a 200 to 240 mile practical range between stops.

This buffer matters more with a trailer attached, since finding a station with adequate room to maneuver and exit safely with a trailer is not always immediate, and running low on a grade or in an area with sparse fuel stops creates a bigger problem than it would without a trailer. Our trip fuel calculator can help plan a full multi-stop route once you have your adjusted towing MPG from this calculator.

What Else Affects Your Towing MPG

Beyond weight and terrain, four additional factors meaningfully affect towing MPG. Speed, headwind, trailer shape, and tire pressure all compound on top of the baseline weight and terrain penalties.

Speed

Every 5 mph driven above 55 mph while towing commonly costs an additional 7 to 10 percent in fuel economy due to rapidly increasing aerodynamic drag at higher speeds. Slowing down is one of the simplest,most direct ways to improve towing MPG on any trip.

Headwind

A steady headwind can reduce towing MPG by roughly 15 percent compared to calm conditions, since the trailer presents significant frontal area for wind resistance to act against. Tailwinds provide a smaller but real benefit in the opposite direction.

Trailer Aerodynamics

Boxy, tall trailers like cube campers create more drag than lower- rofile, rounded trailer designs at the same weight. Trailer side skirts and aerodynamic improvements can recover roughly 5 to 10 percent of towing MPG on long highway trips, particularly above 60 mph.


Tire Pressure

Underinflated tires on either the tow vehicle or the trailer increase rolling resistance and can cost up to 3 percent in fuel economy. Checking both sets of tires before a towing trip is a quick check that directly affects your real towing MPG.


Methodology

Frequently Asked Questions

It depends primarily on trailer weight and terrain. Light trailers under 2,000 lbs typically reduce MPG by 10 to 20 percent. Mid-size trailers in the 2,000 to 5,000 lb range commonly cause a 20 to 35 percent reduction.Heavy trailers over 5,000 lbs can reduce MPG by 35 to 60 percent depending on weight and terrain. A 20 MPG truck towing a 5,000 lb travel trailer on flat terrain commonly drops to around 13 MPG.

At $3.80 per gallon, a fuel cost per mile under $0.55 generally7 indicates above-average fuel economy for a loaded dry van, while $0.60 to $0.70 per mile is common for less efficient equipment like reefers or trucks running in hilly terrain. Remember that fuel cost per mile is only part of your total operating cost per mile, which also includes insurance, maintenance, tolls, and driver wages.

Yes. Boxy, tall trailers like cube-shaped campers create significantly more aerodynamic drag than lower-profile, rounded trailer designs at the same weight, which directly costs additional MPG, particularly at highway speeds above 60 mph where drag matters most. Side skirts and other aerodynamic add-ons can recover some of this loss on long highway trips.

Yes, this calculator works for any towed trailer type, travel trailers,fifth wheels, pop-up campers, and boat trailers, since the underlying weight and terrain penalties apply regardless of what is being towed.For a motorized RV that does not tow a separate trailer, use our MPG calculator or fuel cost calculator directly instead, since this towing-specific adjustment does not apply to a single combined vehicle.

Diesel engines generally deliver better fuel economy and more low-end torque for towing compared to comparable gasoline engines, which is why heavy-duty trucks are commonly available with diesel options for serious towing use. The fuel economy advantage needs to be weighed against the higher upfront cost of diesel engines and typically higher diesel fuel prices, so the better overall choice depends on how much and how often you actually tow. Our truck fuel calculator can help compare diesel cost specifically if you are evaluating a heavier commercial-style towing setup.

Yes, often more significantly than it affects gasoline or diesel vehicles. Towing can reduce an electric vehicle’s range by 30 to 50 percent or more, since the added weight and aerodynamic drag draw heavily on battery capacity, and EV range is already a ighter resource than a gas tank’s deep reserve. This calculator is built around MPG and gallons, so it is designed for gasoline and diesel tow vehicles. For an electric vehicle’s energy cost comparison while towing, treat the percentage-based weight and terrain penalties described on this page as a general directional guide, since EV-specific range loss while towing follows a similar pattern but is not calculated directly by this tool.

Disclaimer

This calculator provides estimates only. Actual towing MPG varies based on vehicle, trailer aerodynamics, weight distribution, terrain, weather, and driving style. See our full disclaimer page for more detail.